Fri Feb 10, 2012 10:42 am
Fri Feb 10, 2012 12:18 pm
Ploesti wrote:Couldn't stop watching CSPAN. Anyone remember this video? Almost convincing if you didn't know better. Did any of you do anything special to remember the 50th? I was recovering from an earthquake out here in SoCal that shook the h*ll out of everything. Remember it like it was yesterday. CSPAN's D-Day 50th coverage was outstanding.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xtR0eVVy1_w
Fri Feb 10, 2012 12:27 pm
Ploesti wrote:Couldn't stop watching CSPAN. Anyone remember this video? Almost convincing if you didn't know better. Did any of you do anything special to remember the 50th? I was recovering from an earthquake out here in SoCal that shook the h*ll out of everything. Remember it like it was yesterday. CSPAN's D-Day 50th coverage was outstanding.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xtR0eVVy1_w
Fri Feb 10, 2012 4:26 pm
Pat Carry wrote:Ploesti wrote:Couldn't stop watching CSPAN. Anyone remember this video? Almost convincing if you didn't know better. Did any of you do anything special to remember the 50th? I was recovering from an earthquake out here in SoCal that shook the h*ll out of everything. Remember it like it was yesterday. CSPAN's D-Day 50th coverage was outstanding.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xtR0eVVy1_w
My wife & I went to Normandy in October of 1994 when the crowds were gone. A fascinating trip. Standing on the cliffs at Pont du Hoc looking down at the water, I starting thinking how did any of those Rangers ever make it up? An amzing feat. We owe so much to them and to all the soldiers who stormed the beaches that day. The thing that I was probably most impressed with was how British 6th Airborne executed the taking of what is now known as the Pegasus Bridge. Their gliders landed precisely on target just feet from the bridge. The original Pegasus Bridge was replaced by a more modern structure in the 90's. Fortunately someone with foresight thought to preserve the original bridge in a museum which looks very interesting. http://www.memorial-pegasus.org/mmp/mus ... hp?lang=uk
Fri Feb 10, 2012 4:44 pm
Fri Feb 10, 2012 5:11 pm
Fri Feb 10, 2012 5:14 pm
Mudge wrote:Pat Carry wrote:Ploesti wrote:Couldn't stop watching CSPAN. Anyone remember this video? Almost convincing if you didn't know better. Did any of you do anything special to remember the 50th? I was recovering from an earthquake out here in SoCal that shook the h*ll out of everything. Remember it like it was yesterday. CSPAN's D-Day 50th coverage was outstanding.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xtR0eVVy1_w
My wife & I went to Normandy in October of 1994 when the crowds were gone. A fascinating trip. Standing on the cliffs at Pont du Hoc looking down at the water, I starting thinking how did any of those Rangers ever make it up? An amzing feat. We owe so much to them and to all the soldiers who stormed the beaches that day. The thing that I was probably most impressed with was how British 6th Airborne executed the taking of what is now known as the Pegasus Bridge. Their gliders landed precisely on target just feet from the bridge. The original Pegasus Bridge was replaced by a more modern structure in the 90's. Fortunately someone with foresight thought to preserve the original bridge in a museum which looks very interesting. http://www.memorial-pegasus.org/mmp/mus ... hp?lang=uk
Pat...you, and anyone else who's been to Omaha Beach, have to agree that, after seeing and standing at the German gun locations, it's nothing short of a miracle that more of the allied troops weren't killed.
Mudge the awestruck
ps. We'll be there in July...again.
Fri Feb 10, 2012 5:26 pm
Fri Feb 10, 2012 6:30 pm
Iclo wrote:Visiting the old battle fields is always impressive.
When I visited Omaha beach, 10 years ago, the weather was very calm, no noise, few peoples. It was impossible to imagine what happened there.
Same feeling when I spent a day in Bastogne area in last December, no snow but very cold, and the same impression that it's impossible to imagine what happened in this calm forest.
Just a small suggestion for the people who will visit the Normandy : visit the small cemetery of La Cambe. It's a German Cemetery, relativelly small, and the contrast of the dark grey stone of the graves is impressive after visiting the "white graves" of the US cemetery in Colleville. For me, it was a "streng feeling" to visit these two places in the same day.
Sat Feb 11, 2012 2:09 am
Hey Lance! Lee Bishop here, I was with K Company in the LCI that had the M1917 .30 caliber water cooled MG team who dropped their gun into the ocean. That was an amazing few days, one I remember very well. How about everyone bar-hopping in WW2 vehicles along Atlantic drive in Virginia Beach during the evenings of the event?Pogmusic wrote:Holy cow! I was there taking part in that. We manned a pseudo Flak 88 on the beach (Russian Desert Storm bring back). The 109 had lost its spinner prior to arriving; but, they flew it anyway. The first wave consisted of Virginia Army NG guys who had the instructions that the first half of the LCs would get off the boat and be "Mowed down" it was scary to see the LCs hit the beach and then see half of each LC fall flat "DEAD". Very moving day. As we marched off the beach, the WWII vets thanked us for remembering. I had just gotten out of the Army (12 years active) and was very moved by their honest emotions.